I feel it. I name it. I let it go.
So it might surprise you that one quarter through that first margarita we started fighting. We don't fight often these days, and when we do it's usually quite civil. This was an old-style fight with incredulous looks and just-caught nastiness. Each of us thought the other was clueless, wasn't listening, was going off on some crazy tangent. Ultimately, we pulled it back together, reached a deeper understanding, but for fifteen tense minutes, I fought the urge to run out of the restaurant into the cold rain. I fought the urge to be by myself and pretend that it was better this way, to live without risk, to be warmed only by my own intellect and senses.
Yes, here they are again.
My parents after their wedding, June 1969,
staring off into the misty future. It's too
late now ...
Earlier that day, my mother
and I had been talking about trust and
infidelity. I explained how how I learned
some time ago that to trust in others blindly
is foolish because no one is perfect. Other
people can let you down, not out of cruelty,
but because they are human and bound to make
mistakes. If you expect perfection or total
fidelity, you may end up very disappointed,
so why not keep an open mind about it? Not to
expect to be let down, but to not let
yourself get crushed if it happens?
The words had come out with more vitriol and
less clarity than I felt. I sounded angry,
specifically with my husband, and Mom asked
me if he knew I was so angry. Strange. I
didn't feel angry. But there Mr. Trinkle and
I were in Fonda a few hours later, raising
our voices. For the last half of the fight,
I'd been dabbing at my eyes with the corner
of my cloth napkin, trying to hold back the
tears. It felt like I'd been willing them not
to fall for weeks, maybe months, while I kept
the rest of life together. When it was over,
when we reached détente,
the tears came out, along with
the sudden understanding that this whole
thing was all about my
mother. Or maybe it wasn't that
simple. It was also all about my
father. And let's not forget to
point a finger at the dissertation and the
feelings it stirred up in its death throes.
That thing was once used as a wedge, a
separator, an agent of my perceived
rejection. The diss is dead and buried now.
It hadn't been an issue for years. What could
I hold against a corpse?
Here is my mother, more present than I ever
remember. There is no demanding, angry Kevin,
no Baltimore petty criminal heroin addict
boyfriend, no personal life drama to get in
the way. When Mr. Trinkle and I left the East
Coast, the addict was the center of her life.
Interacting with her then felt like a
continual rejection, an extension of the
loneliness of childhood, though I see now
that that the rejection has never been
personal. In the past two and a half years,
she's changed her life. The addict is now on
the periphery, no longer the center of her
world. There is no drama. She is here, flawed
but available. I have just enough safe space
for the anger to emerge. It's wordless, this
anger, and scared, too, rage coupled with
fear. I know she is capable of turning on me,
of causing great pain, of making me wish I
never existed. Or at least that's how it used
to be.
Here is my husband, present and loving. The
days of avoidance by dissertation are long
over, but I remember them, remember how
neatly our neuroses fit together, his
reluctance dovetailing with my grasping need
for absolute acceptance, with the tests and
the tantrums, the nastiness and tossed
objects. We have a history, a time when I
felt very rejected, unloveable, and even
though we've talked the hell out of it, there
are still those tight corners in our
relationship that remind me.
Combine my mother's visit with the completion
of the dissertation and those deep feelings
of unworthiness rise up. They poke and prod.
I want to run out in the rain and be alone
forever. I want to ball up my fists and
shadowbox in the cold attic. I want to be
invisible, the observer who cannot be
observed. An old self-protective voice
whispers if you let them get too
close, they could destroy you. Keep your
distance. But this is not the only
way to see things. I have choices.
Now the struggle to be present, to be in the
moment, is mine. If I don't give all of
myself over, if I hold back, I don't risk
absolute rejection. It used to be that I
would test the ones who loved me, would stamp
my feet and pepper every fight with threats
to leave. These days I hide under a carapace
of calm. I hold it together and when I do
break, I tend to downplay my vulnerability. I
maintain a friendly facade, a protective
attitude. Intimacy equals risk. Oh, it's easy
with you, reader. We have geographical
distance and thick words to separate us. The
pull of the everyday, the undertow of the
mundane, doesn't come between us. We can
pretend for a few minutes that we are
intimates, reach an understanding without
touch, and then return to our real lives
unscathed.
Already all of this is changing for me. By
the time my thoughts get to you, I'm working
them out, naming the feelings, articulating
them so I can put them away. One of the
reasons this blog was so important to my
recovery process (I call it a recovery
process because I don’t know what else to
call it) is because it gave me a place to
name my fears, to articulate my ugliness in a
relatively risk-free environment. Still,
there are risks. When I find out that someone
I know in real life or from my past has read
the blog, I feel a panicked thrill – they
know! (Depending on how far they've read, of
course. They may know very little.) And then
my stomach sinks and I feel a different sort
of panic. I'm afraid of being judged for the
things I've done, for those I've scraped up
along the way. But I also worry that they
will read and think: She deserved it. They
will wonder about the intrinsic evil in me,
about the horrible things I must have done to
cause my family to abandon me. Rationally, I
know this is crazy. Emotionally, it makes my
heart ache.
I feel it. I name it. I let it go. But it
isn't easy.
Thug life
We have family
in town for the next week, so things may be
quiet around here. In the meantime, Happy
End-of-December and Merry New Year! And be on
the lookout for these guys -- I'm not sure if
they are carrying little Christmas trees or
spiky clubs.
Image: Some of the many
Santas in my father and stepmother's
collection.
A sense of place
We lived in that first Adams Morgan apartment for five-and-half years. It was a stately, if somewhat shabby one-bedroom with a working fireplace in the living room and an ornamental fireplace in the eat-in kitchen. The ceilings were high and the front wall had three windows set in a subtle, pleasing curve. Just off the kitchen was a sliver of backyard space that I planted with impatiens and elephant's ear that first summer, before we figured out that the upstairs air conditioner dripped on our heads, left the small landing permanently damp, and that the dryer vent above would sometimes let loose flurries of lint. There was also no coat closet. Shortly after signing the lease we remedied that by buying the armoire at an antique shop around the corner on 18th Street. So the armoire was first. The dog, the marriage, the kid, they all came later. The apartment saw it all.

The one-bedroom was on the bottom floor of a
four-story townhouse and the family that
owned the house and lived in the floors above
us had two girls and a pug. They weren't
overly noisy, didn't have loud parties or
screaming fights, but since our space was
separated from theirs by a only couple of
thin interior doors, we heard everything.
There were pounding footsteps and scraping
chairs, the sad howls of their dog when they
left her alone over long weekends, fourth of
July firecrackers set off three feet from our
bedroom. Once the baby came along, the baby
that slept like an insomniac, whose sleep we
were desperate to encourage, we left the
apartment for larger digs in Alexandria,
Virginia, though our son was sixteen months
old by the time we finally moved.
Moving to Walnut Street brought us full
circle. The drafty three-bedroom house had a
fenced-in yard, two floors, and a second
bathroom and was on the very same block Mr.
Trinkle and I had lived on when we first
moved in together in late 1999. But it was
temporary from the beginning: as we were
packing up our DC apartment, we got a call
that led to my husband's current California
job. In the end we lived in Alexandria for
only six months. I remember that time through
a haze of rain and snow, of grasping grayness
and cold feet. We were a 25-minute Metro ride
into the city, but felt very far away from
our cozy, familiar neighborhood in the heart
of DC. My husband often didn't get home from
work until after our son was asleep and we no
longer had our occasional babysitter. I tried
to keep sane, joined some mom's groups,
bundled up the boy to get into the city when
I felt up for dragging a stroller on the
Metro or schlepping our 25-pounder on my
back. Just as spring was beginning to dab the
trees green, to coax flowers out of the soggy
ground, we moved again, to Berkeley.
And it was tough. The first year here was
lonely. Our son hated playgrounds and other
children in general and I knew no one. Mr.
Trinkle was grappling with a new job
situation and I was grappling with an
unacknowledged past. It's hard for me to
believe now that up until the summer of 2007,
I wrote nothing.
Nothing.
Well, maybe the
occasional whiny journal entry, at the rate
of one or two a year, but that was it. I
started writing and Mr. Trinkle and I started
repairing and then I found a friend or three
and a writing group and a good place for the
kid to go to preschool. And then Mr. Trinkle
finished his dissertation (I could be calling
him here "Dr. Trinkle," but he nixed that
one), something that had been hanging over
him, over the two of us, for our entire
relationship.
We've been talking about what is next. It
could be a move from here back to there, back
to the center of the policy universe with its
wonks and its humidity and beautiful houses.
If we lived in Washington, DC, my family
would be geographically closer. I have
long-time friends there that I miss, and
there are those cherry-tree lined streets and
majestic buildings. I just don't know if it's
home anymore.
Home. DC used to be home. It
felt
that way from the beginning, from
the day I moved there at nineteen. It was
all about the houses, the formal public
architecture, the restaurants and street
people. I took pride in living in the
center of a very specific universe, the
place where people would gather to march
and protest, where the federal government
would slowly crank out laws, regulations,
and decisions. Even the wonks, in their
rumpled suits, walking with a sense of
purpose or the wide-eyed look of the
permanently distracted, were endearing to
me. (The K Street lobbyist/lawyer types
left me cold.) I still feel truly alive
wandering the neighborhoods there,
sludging through summer heat or pressing
my boots into the slush. However, I've
never lived in DC without a shield, a
barrier between myself and other people.
The town was made for shields, all that
talk about policy and none about emotion.
The emotions go underground, are
sublimated by intellect. It's so ... male
and macho, in an über-rational sort of
way.

Berkeley's architecture does nothing for me.
My general reaction when I walk around our
neighborhood is "meh,
bungalows" though I do enjoy
getting up into the
hills where the air is
rarefied. It's the people and the
philosophies here that I love, the
crunchiness of it all. Berkeley is where I
had the freedom to come clean and to
become a writer. I don't feel (much) of a
need to explain myself here, to talk about
why I don't have an outside job, to
stumble over the "what do you do?"
question. And I've made some real friends
here, too, women that I want to know even
better, that I want to have years with, so
that our children can be lifelong friends,
too.
Home is eucalyptus-scented. It's juicy local
strawberries all year long. It's hills with
bay views and streets with devoted bike
lanes. It's where my son is making friends
and where I am, too, friends who don't know
me as a librarian but as a writer and a
mother, a woman with a past who isn't defined
by that past. This feeling, of home and
openness, is fresh and delicate. I don't know
if it will survive a move.
Ask me next week, though, and I might be
pining for marble and brick, for trail runs
in Rock Creek Park, for fireflies on June
nights and snowstorms in January, for dinner
with friends at Lebanese Taverna or Oyamel.
I'll tell you that I can maintain those new
friendships, can adapt to life back in the
District, that proximity to my family will
make things easier, will give my son the
safety net of an extended family.
I'm split. We'll figure it out soon enough (I
hope) and I'm sure you will be reading all
about it.
Upper image: View out
kitchen door, Washington, DC, Winter 2005?
Lower image: Our sidewalk, Berkeley,
2009.
Berkeley type

There’s a man with thick silver hair who will
save me. I’ll run into him at Good Vibrations
or while thumping melons at the Berkeley
Bowl. Eyes quizzical, brow scrunched, I'll
ask his advice as I peruse the erotica or the
tomatoes. “How do I pick a ripe one?”
I'll say, then press my lips together in
anticipation, run a nervous hand through my
own uncombed mane, worry the tear in my
formless tee.
He’s capable, my man with silver hair, knows
what I require. “I haven’t read this stuff in
years,” I’ll tell him, batting my innocent
eyes. “A girlfriend of mine recommended the
selection here. Do you have any
recommendations?” Or: “My naturopath
has finally given me the green light for
nightshades, as long as I don’t combine
potatoes and tomatoes in the same week. But
how can you tell when a pineapple tomato is
ripe?”
He’s firm, my man with silver hair. Turns out
his name is Nathanial and he stays away from
pornography and tomatoes. He scrapes a thin
layer of coconut oil on his multigrain toast
and makes his own organic soy milk. He lives
in a house constructed of bales of hay coated
in plaster, collects the rainwater and the
grey water to pour over his lush,
nightshade-free garden. In a far back corner
of his yard, a former girlfriend has
constructed a pyramid of empty television
sets and we sit and watch in calming yogic
poses, balancing our diminishing frames on
iron loungers furred with ivy.
Nathanial leads me away from temptation. He
slices layers of butternut squash, thin as
sashimi, dries them in the sun, and layers
them with nut cheeses and frothy cucumber
juice: lasagna! With him I learn the
taste of a peach, the value of chastity, the
length of my arms from fingertip to
fingertip. During our monthly fasts, we see
visions, hummingbirds like fairies in the
passionflower, fabulous eagles, strong and
formidable, emerging from sketchy fog. And my
parents appear before me, penitent and
humbled. They kneel at my feet and I dismiss
them with a forgiving wave. The vision
repeats and I never tire of it, my power, the
moment of clarity.
When it’s over, when I am saved and clean and
about twenty-five pounds lighter, after my
visions start to wear thin, Nathanial will
move on to the next orphan. He is
evangelical, gathering souls away from
processed foods and packaged T&A, a beam
of light that moves from soul to soul. I want
to warn them, the lady paused in front of the
cornflakes, the college boy reaching for a
six-pack of Milwaukee’s Best, the skittish
dog-walker about to cross Dwight: It isn't us
he wants. It's the karma.
From a prompt last summer:
I am counting. Despite the first-person point
of view, this is fictional. Just a reminder.
Image: The infamous Berkeley
Bowl, from a
2005 New York
Times article.
A virulent strain of grief
And then there was what happened to Kevin.

I’ve written about Kevin,
my mother’s long-term boyfriend, here before,
in short bursts of roundabout language. He
came into our lives when I was fourteen and
nothing was ever really the same again. By
the time I was fifteen, I was living in the
Little House with disastrous results and he
and my mother were at the thin edge of
eighteen tumultuous years together. Kevin is
starting to lose his mythical qualities, has
become more human in my mind in the last
year, more culpable and weak. He was a bully,
really, a smart and witty bully, though that
of course was not the whole of him.
[Warning: The below goes
into detail about an illness and a harrowing
hospital stay and may be upsetting to some
readers.]
In March 2002, Kevin, 55 years old, died of,
well, it’s a little murky. He was in the
final stages of myelofibrosis,
a bone marrow disease, though it was probably
pneumonia that did that last dirty work. With
myelofibrosis, the bone marrow becomes
fibrous and hard. Blood production that
normally occurs in the bone marrow moves to
other organs -- the spleen, the liver -- in a
last-ditch effort to make blood, a phenomenon
with the poetic name extramedullary
hematopoesis. These organs try, but
ultimately fail, to make useful blood.
Instead, they produce bad blood, the cells
immature and misshapen, blood that does a
half-assed job of keeping the body healthy.
People with myelofibrosis are often anemic;
they bruise easily and are susceptible to
infection and bone pain. While there are
drugs to manage this disease, there is no
cure outside of a stem cell transplant, which
is always a dicey position. If you have it,
one way or another, myelofibrosis will
eventually kill you. Or more accurately, an
infection will kill you. Or you will develop
leukemia. Or you will develop a wasting
illness. Or your liver will cease to work
(because of the extramedullary hematopoesis).
Before March 2002, before we called in
hospice and accepted the fact that Kevin’s
death was imminent, Kevin spent six months in
the hospital, nearly all of it in the
Critical Care Unit (like an intensive care
unit) or a unit one step below Critical Care.
Trying to write about that time in a way that
makes any sense is impossible. I’ve tried it,
tried to come up with a timeline and a reason
why he ended up on a ventilator (aka
respirator) shortly after he was admitted and
how early on we thought he was going to
slowly bleed to death until a miracle worker
hematologist/oncologist came up with a genius
solution to get Kevin’s blood to clot, and
how Kevin couldn’t swallow because his
epiglottis was damaged from his emergency
intubations, so he couldn’t eat and how there
was a doctor we called Dr. Death because he
insisted on telling Kevin he wasn’t going to
make it, let alone walk again (he was right
on the former, wrong on the latter). Kevin
was on the vent/off the vent. He kept on
getting pneumonia. He was hooked up to tubes
and lines, trapped. But alive.
Fall 2001 was full of death and fire, of
anthrax scares and work closures, of mail
that came to the federal library where I
worked months old, crispy and irradiated. It
was the beginning of Kevin’s long end, a
journey that required great vigilance on my
mother’s part and the amazing efforts of a
large number of doctors and nurses. Being in
CCU for six months is incredibly intense,
all-encompassing, and stressful, and when a
patient is as fragile as Kevin was,
you have
to be vigilant.
It isn’t that the professionals aren’t
competent, it’s just that they want to do
things, think that action is always the best
course. And sometimes it isn’t.
When I sat down to start my NaNoWriMo novel,
all those details of his hospitalization came
out, details I have stored away for years:
the sound of the ventilator and the beeps of
IVs that need attention; the smell of
pneumonic mucus as I suctioned it out of
Kevin's trach; the image of Kevin trapped
under a blanket of tubes and devices, so
fragile you didn't want to touch him (and the
too-late knowledge that he must have been
desperate for touch); the horrors of his
frequent intubations, emergency procedures
where doctors had to essentially jam an air
tube down his throat after his oxygen levels
dropped precipitously; the rushed meals at
Taco Bell Express, knowing we had to get back
and that eating in front of him when he was
getting his food, this green sludge, through
a stomach tube would have been horribly
cruel; how skinny, impossibly skinny he
became. How, after being bedridden and
hospitalized for three months, he took his
80-pound frame and a walker and did halting
laps around the CCU, in an act of pure will.
So all this came spewing out last month,
disguised under a new premise with a much
younger protagonist. After the month was over
and the first draft off my head, I realized I
had a lot of legwork to do. For example, I
know next to nothing about the disease I had
chosen to grace my unlucky character with.
And what do I know, really, about parental
grief, which is a particularly virulent
strain? I've been doing research, reading
books and looking at websites. There is one
blog out there, very detailed and
well-written, created by a mother who was
chronicling her little boy's fight against
cancer. That little boy died in September.
The whole thing is horribly sad (and as I
read it, I wonder: why, exactly, am I doing
this?).
When you are in the middle of a
life-and-death-struggle, the intensity of
keeping someone alive, of trying to make them
well, it's all you can think about.
Everything becomes medical and you find out
all you can. You learn about the strength of
nurses and the support system that crops up
in a hospital. You learn to live with things
you never thought were possible before. You
are steeped in the smells and sounds of
illness and it feels like it will never end.
You don’t want it to end with death, but
sometimes it does and you have to let go of
the struggle. I read this blog and I cry, for
this family and the little boy that will
never grow up. I hope that I can do justice
to him and to Kevin and to all the people who
have experienced such prolonged pain.
The kid at Kevin's grave on Maryland's
Eastern Shore, April 2009.
Perhaps this is an impossibly tall order.
What I'm looking for now is authenticity, a
way to write something that sings and is true
and real, that doesn't exploit illness as a
book topic, but brings it to life and honors
those that have gone before us.
It's daunting.
Top
image: Kevin at Georgetown University
Hospital, January 2002, about three months
before he died.
Golden
I finally stopped running.
The routine felt oppressive and there was all
that huffing and puffing. Everything went by
so fast, the bungalows of Berkeley a blur,
the friendly cats passed in a leap, the
crazies of University Avenue or MLK deftly
avoided (or ignored). I couldn't think beyond
my heartbeat. When I first started running
again, there was pleasure in
the rush, in the pounding of my feet.
There was purpose. But now I was getting
bored with my routes and not feeling
motivated enough to pick new ones.
So now I walk. Three mornings a week, I
wander the sidewalks, sometimes stop to pet a
cat or watch one hummingbird dive-bomb
another. I still move quickly, a hair over
four miles per hour, fast enough to get a
workout, but slow enough to really see
things. My weekday walks are relatively
short, about three miles, but on Sundays I
have the luxury (thanks to my husband) of
going longer, often past six miles.
View of the hills from my street.
From our neighborhood in
the flats, with its stubby trees and cozy
two-bedroom bungalows, I head for the hills,
where the trees and the houses stretch out in
all directions. It's not that the hills are
less populous: even more than in our West
Berkeley neighborhood, houses here are packed
in tight. And like the flats, there are
places where large backyards have been taken
over by second, income-generating houses. But
there are all those trees,
and the streets twist and get vertical before
suddenly dipping and rising again. The houses
are generally bigger and more various, fun to
look at, to imagine myself in. The views are
also incredible. My Sunday walk is a hike on
sturdy sidewalks, much of the beauty with
none of the mud of a woodland trail.
For the first half of the walk, I usually
talk to my mother on the phone -- though I
have to ask her to do most of the talking
during some of the steeper climbs (and
forgive me my heaving breathing). We've had
some of our most interesting conversations
during these walks, about books and what it
means to be a writer, about art and spirit.
View of Marin County and the San Francisco
Bay from Euclid Avenue, just before the
Berkeley
Rose Garden.
During the second half, I
look at the houses and the view. I think. On
a clear day, you can see the hills of Marin
County across the Bay or catch a glimpse of
the Golden Gate bridge. I imagine a life in a
house perched high, where I would inch my way
up from the sidewalk on a set of narrow steps
edged into rock. The chill of pine-scented
fog would accompany my morning coffee and I
would watch every sunset from my teetering
deck, stand wrapped in a wool blanket,
sipping a glass of plummy Zinfandel as the
sky fills with color. Near the base of one
hill, I pass a small wooden house constructed
around a tree. The house is rustic, with
unfinished planks as siding. On colder
mornings, a line of smoke trails from the
chimney. What would it be like to live in
such a house, where nature has been invited
in? Here I would bake my own bread in a
wood-fired oven, have a huge untidy garden,
maybe a couple of egg-laying chickens out
back.
The view down
from Keith Avenue.
Around mile four, I'm going downhill and the
endorphins start to kick in. I think about
how lucky I am to have my husband, so funny
and creative, smart and loving, how lucky we
are to have our boy, how maybe I can do this
writing thing after all. I don't worry about
income or what is coming next, just feel
appreciative for all that I have. Which is a
lot. I realize that in many of my
alternate-life fantasies, I am alone, and I
wonder about my imagined bereftness when I
have a loving family at home. I'm
self-protective even in my imagination, and I
make a vow to change that, to bring my family
into these scenes, there with me as I sip the
Zinfandel or collect eggs from the chicken
coop. The recognition of my stubborn fear of
loss makes my heart ache and I pick up the
pace in anticipation of seeing my husband and
son.
The trees start to get smaller, the houses
less lavish. The sidewalk loses its slope.
The hills are behind me now, a dramatic
backdrop against cottony blue. My legs are
starting to ache and my stomach growls in
anticipation of food. By the time I reach our
block, I have acclimated back to the flats,
to the place where my family waits. I walk in
the front door, tired and happy. Mr. Trinkle,
the kid, and our various animals greet me
with hugs, kisses, and licks, and the humans
in the house sit down for our traditional
Sunday breakfast of bagels and cream cheese
with a side of the Sunday New York
Times.
This is where I belong.
Top image: A peek at the
San Francisco Bay and the Golden Gate Bridge,
taken from just above the Berkeley Rose
Garden. All photos from November
2009.
Honestly?
The most neglected of these good people is Dori, who writes a fine expat blog A Yellow House in England. She has given writing to survive several awards, including the Neno Award, the Most Inspirational Blog Award, the Friendship Award, and the Butterfly Award. It's one thing that that Dori has received all of these awards herself, which is a sure sign of her writing prowess, but it's also another that she has taken the time to pass them on, which is a sure sign of her kindness. Thank you, Dori, and my apologies for letting these awards slip away.
One of the perils of not acknowledging these things immediately is that they disappear into the Great Internet Beyond and my own memory's sketchy storage system. So I remember that Svasti passed on an award. And Robert. I know I'm missing at least one other blogger. If you are out there reading, leave a comment and I will add your blog to the list.
Which brings me to the latest award. La Belette Rouge, memoirist, humorist, spot-on writer and all-around great blogger, has passed along the Honest Scrap Award. One of the fun things about this award is the requirement to list ten honest things about oneself. A daunting task. The award also requires that I pass it on to ten bloggers. Here is where I always fall down on the job. If you would like to take this award and run with it, on your own blog or in the comments section below, feel free.
So. Gulp. Here I go.
My parents, all
gussied up for the 1968 Senior Prom. Oh, if I
could only still hold you two responsible for
my neurotic ways! Instead, I will use you as
photographic filler.
1. I find this task
terrifying. Why? On one hand, I am pretty
boring. On the other, I have all these
worries that I am used to keeping mainly to
myself. I am neurotic, for lack of a better
term. So I find myself thinking of writing
things here like "I am pathetic and
antisocial." or "If you met me in the flesh,
you'd be questioning whether I was really the
person who writes this stuff." OK. Let's just
say I'm insecure.
2. To continue in the same
vein, now that it is possible that a lot of
people from my past, childhood friends, old
high school buddies, people who knew me in
college, read this blog, I wonder what they
think about these stories of mine. Did any of
them know this stuff already? Do they look
back at me with kindness or do they judge me?
I'll never know, so I think I'll go for the
kindness angle.
3. I will listen to a song over and over
again when I have it stuck in my mind. Recent
selections include Finish
What You Started, All
Come True, Funk
#49, and Hot
Sauce. Oh, and
Ball
and Biscuit.
4. While I am a good cook, some might even
say a great cook, the only things that my son
will eat in my presence are noodles with
butter and cheese, packaged macaroni and
cheese, grilled cheese sandwiches,
pizza crusts,
and rice and beans from Chipotle (yes, he
even refuses my rice and beans). Pasta with
cream sauce? No. Soothing, buttery polenta? I
don't think so. Anything with a green fleck
or two in it? You must be joking. This would
drive anyone crazy, but I had an epiphany the
other night about why it was driving
me murderously
crazy. I have
"meal issues," probably from a childhood
of bad
dinner table
experiences, from being made to
stand at the table as a three-year-old on
a regular basis, to being totally ignored
or berated by my former stepfather at
mealtime, to finally being rejected as a
dinner partner by my mother and Kevin when
I was fourteen. My son's unhappiness with
my food offerings felt, well, deeply
personal. Once I realized this, my
irritation level at his dietary
preferences went down several notches.
Though I still find them maddening.
5. You know that I don't
drive, right? But did you
also know that I don't bike, skateboard,
scoot or Segway? It's a wheel thing, I
suppose.
6.
I really should be working on my novel. On my
good (or is that "crazy"?) days, I have these
grandiose notions of the brilliance of my
writing. On my bad (or is that "realistic"?)
days, I think my writing will never amount to
anything. So blogging keeps me going while
also distracting me from the larger purpose.
7. I hold on to people in my
mind, keep crushes for
decades, never really forget a
friend, even if I haven’t spoken to them
directly since middle school or even
earlier. These attachments keep me plugged
into the world, gossamer threads from my
mind to yours. All it takes is a little
tug -- a photo, an email, a similar name
-- for me to conjure up the smells, the
meal, the pains and joys, that awkward
conversation we had fifteen years ago.
8. It could be that three cats, one dog, one
child, one husband, a two-story house, and a
backyard is too much. So I don't vacuum
nearly as often as I should, the toilet needs
scrubbing, and I finally stopped watering the
impatiens after six months of careful
attention.
9. My only regret is that I should have
kissed him when I had the chance. Just to get
it out of my head. This was years ago, when I
was so focused on doing the right thing, on
keeping a tenuous hold on my first marriage.
But that kiss will never happen and as time
goes by, the moment and its importance feel
more and more distant. Still, I think about
it sometimes and try to console myself with
the fact that it would have been destined to
end badly and my desire would have gone the
way of most, shot through with sadness and
regret.
10. I talk to my mother on
the phone almost every day. Sometimes more
than once a day. I worry about whether this
is healthy, not because of our conversations
or how I feel afterwards (I feel fine), but
mainly because I think it can stand in for
interactions with other people, like people
on this coast or friends I haven't spoken to
in ages. Maybe it gets in the way of
potential friendships. Maybe I should pick up
the phone and call my father every once in a
while. Or maybe I'm just neurotic and worry
too much.
There you go. Another morning of
novel-writing gone. But this was more
fun.



